Tag Archives: prioritization

A question that is asked regularly in testing circles is: “When should you stop testing?”. With an infinite budget it may be reasonably easy to answer this question. When the budget is severely constrained, this question becomes more difficult to answer. An even more difficult situation to address is when the project starts out with a given budget, but during the project lifetime the budget gets significantly reduced (i.e. due to economic downturn). This forces us be able to provide the highest level of quality for the least amount of money.

How Testing Fails

A mistake that is often made is that the testing effort is distributed equally across the system – both critical and less critical portions of the system are tested equally. This results in critical parts of the system not being tested sufficiently and less critical parts being tested to the point of diminishing returns.

A further mistaken mindset of developers is that there is no such thing as a useless test, which may entice developers to add tests for the sake of adding tests. In actual fact every test (unit-, integration- or systems test) has to earn its place in the codebase. If there no good motivation for a test, the test must be deleted from the codebase. Why is that? It adds to volume of code that developers have to master to be productive members of the team. It adds to the volume of code that has to be maintained. As such tests adds to the overall cost of maintenance of a system. Remember: The most cost effective code to maintain is the code that has never been written.

Risk Based Testing

Risk based testing is a testing approach that is helpful in addressing these concerns. The main advantage of risk based testing is to enable prioritization of the testing effort. The heart of risk based testing is to provide a set of criteria for evaluating risk. Some criteria for determining risk can be found in [1]. The criteria may differ depending on the project. Ideally the set of criteria needs to be negotiated with the project owners. Another important aspect is to decide on the level at which risk will be determined. For example, risk may be determined at business process, component or use case levels.

Some general criteria are provided below:

How frequently is this use case used?

What will be the cost of getting this use case wrong?

What is the complexity of this use case?

How often will the use case be changed?

A value from 1 to 5 is assigned for each of these criteria and the product determined. This product provides a way for ranking the risk of each use case. A higher risk value will indicate a use case with a higher risk.

Ideally determining risk should not be left to developers. Developers need to be guided by the project owner, the architect and the business analyst on their project.

Advantages/Disadvantages of Risk Based Testing

Advantages of this approach are:

The highest risk items can be developed and tested first which reduces the overall risk on the project.

If testing has to be watered down, a guideline exists for deciding what to test and what not to test.

At any given time an indication can be given of the risk of the project by considering the highest risk use cases that has not been tested.

A possible disadvantage of risk based testing is that not everything will be tested, but as stated earlier, if a testcase cannot be motivated, it may be more cost effective to not have the test as part of the codebase.

Conclusion

Risk based testing provides a means via which one can estimate how well, or how poorly, a system has been tested.

Some developers who are passionate about testing are sometimes also fanatical advocates of Test Driven Development (TDD), to the point that they believe TDD is the only correct way to test applications. Strict adherence to TDD requires a test to be created first before any code has been written. As such proponents of TDD tend to see TDD as a design mechanism rather than as a test mechanism. Irrespective of whether TDD is used as a design and/or test mechanism, it has a number of pitfalls.

In this post I will:

give a brief overview of the TDD cycle,

explain why TDD as software design mechanism is inadequate,

explain why TDD as software test mechanism is inadequate,

explain the conditions under which TDD can be applied successfully to projects.

TDD

In TDD the steps to add new code are as follows [1]:

Add a (failing) test that serves as a specification for the new functionality to be added.

Run all the tests and confirm that the newly added test fails.

Implement the new functionality.

Run all tests to confirm that they all succeed.

Refactor the code to remove any duplication.

The aim of TDD is to provide a simple way to grow the design of complex software one decision at a time.

TDD as a Design Mechanism

From a design perspective TDD emphasizes mirco level design rather than macro level design [2]. The weaknesses of this approach are:

TDD forces a developer to necessarily focus on a single interface. This often neglects the interaction between interfaces and leads to poor abstraction. Bertrand Meyer gives a balanced review of the challenges regarding TDD and Agile in this regard [3].

Quality attributes (like performance, scalability, integrability, security, etc.) are easily overlooked with TDD. In the context of Agile, where an upfront architecture effort is typically frowned upon, TDD is particularly dangerous due to poor consideration of quality attributes.

TDD as a Testing Mechanism

From a testing perspective TDD has the following drawbacks:

Interfaces/classes may be polluted in order to make them testable. A typical example is that a private method is made public in order to test it. This obfuscates the intended use of the class which will cause developers to more easily digress from the intended use of the class. In the long term this creates an unmaintainable system.

Often when TDD is used on projects, unit testing is used to exclusion, with limited or no regard for the broad spectrum of testing, which should at least include integration testing and systems testing.

TDD has no appreciation for the prioritization of the testing effort: Equal amounts of effort are expended to test all code irrespective of the associated risk profile. Typically TDD expects all further development to be blocked until all tests pass. This ignores the reality that some functionality has greater business value than others.

Guidelines for using TDD Effectively on Projects

TDD can be used with no side effect if the following process is adhered to:

The architecture has to be complete, which should include details as to how testability of the system at all levels (unit-, integration- and systems testing) will be achieved.

The risk profile of the sub system (module/use case) has been established, which informs the testing effort that must be expended on the sub system.

The design for the sub system (module/use case) should be complete in adherence to the architecture and risk profile. Since testability is considered as part of the architecture, and the design is informed by the architecture, the design should be by definition testable.

Only at this point is the developer now free to follow a TDD approach in implementing the code.

Conclusion

The very positive thing that TDD emphasizes is the need for testing. However, to naively embrace TDD, is to do it at the peril of your project.